"Very many pleasures are almost only pleasures because we hope and intend to recount them." –Giacomo Leopardi

Unexpected Pairings for the Palate: G&C, anyone?

Okay, children of the 80s. Does anyone out there remember those old Reeses Peanut Butter cup commercials featuring improbable mishaps between slippery chocolate bars and peanut butter jars?

“Hey, you got your chocolate in my peanut butter!” “You got your peanut butter on my chocolate!” the offended parties exclaim after colliding on a random street corner, tumbling down a flight of stairs, or bumping into a robot on a space ship’s elevator. (Indeed, it beggars belief, but I’ve got YouTube to back me up here).

The only thing more unlikely than any of these pratfalls actually occurring—while one party is nose deep in a tub of peanut butter, no less—is that anyone could ever have doubted that the culinary union of these two delicacies would result in gastronomic bliss.

Dodd’s Gin & Rococos’ white cardamom chocolate

The notion of mixing chocolate with gin, however, requires considerably more imagination. Yet a G&C (gin and chocolate, that is) may be equally destined to become a classic, as I recently discovered.

I was at Rococo Chocolates in Marylebone, London, at a second anniversary party for 5ive Star London, a website that serves as a one-stop-shop for London’s top hotels and iconic British brands.

It’s a treasure trove combining big names—Harrods, Fortnum & Mason, and Paul Smith, for example—as well as carefully curated up-and-comers, such as Dodd’s Gin, which co-hosted the evening’s event along with Rococo, another 5ive Star London member.

Dodd’s is produced by the London Distillery, a fledgling boutique operation that opened in Battersea in April 2013.

Master distiller Graham Michie and founding partner Darren Rook use both hot and cold distillates (a process which Rook claims is unique in the world), employing a still named for Rook’s wife, Christina.

Noting my curiosity, Rook whipped out his laptop, proudly displaying an image of an absolute beauty. “Lovely,” I cooed, noting the sensuous curves and copper crown. “Any resemblance to your wife?” (Yes, it was a photo of the still).

Darren Rook & Graham Michie

Currently, Dodd’s yields just 1,000 bottles per month, which Michie and Rook bottle and label by hand themselves.

You might assume an astringent spirit would curdle a candy bar, but in fact, it produced quite a creamy kick with a bite.

Rococo, founded 31 years ago, is no newbie when it comes to unusual flavour pairings. With three shops in London and a fourth in Chester, as well as an online store, Rococo stocks inventive sweets like grenadine and Islay single malt ganache, Earl Gray Tea ganache, and chocolates ranging from basil and Persian lime to orange and geranium, as well as the timeless (and top-selling) Anglesey sea salted caramel.

Rococo Chocolates in Marylebone, London

Much of Rococo’s chocolate comes from cocoa beans grown on the company’s own estate in Grenada. That’s important, explained Rococo’s founder and creative director, Chantal Coady, because single estate beans, like wine grapes, possess their own distinctive terroir. In the case of their Grenadian Trinitario chocolate, it imparts notes of hay and leather, wood, raspberry, citrus and raisin.

“We want our flavours to be fun, but the origin of the ingredients is key,” Coady said. “It’s about both pleasure and provenance.”

If you want to discover more deliciously unexpected pairings, don’t rely on a Reeses-style encounter with a (peanut) butter-fingered robot. Check out Rococo’s “chocolate and whisky” evening on March 26. £35 per person; booking essential.